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All Seasons

Season 2014

Season 2015

  • S2015E01 Play a game of "Movement Telephone" | Ryan McNamara

    • January 8, 2015

    Performance artist Ryan McNamara joins PBS Digital Studio's The Art Assignment to challenge you to play a game of MOVEMENT TELEPHONE.

  • S2015E02 Facilitate an Encounter / Encuentro | Dignicraft

    • January 22, 2015

    The Art Assignment visits artist collective Dignicraft during their residency at the McColl Center for Art + Innovation, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Omar Foglio, José Luis Figueroa, and Paola Rodriguez give us the assignment to facilitate an Encounter / Encuentro.

  • S2015E03 Notes from New Orleans

    • January 29, 2015

    We visited New Orleans for the Prospect.3 exhibition and saw some fantastic art by Carrie Mae Weems, Camille Henrot, Shigeru Ban, Kerry James Marshall, and Tavares Strachan.

  • S2015E04 Become Someone Else | Tameka Norris

    • February 15, 2015

    We’re talking about your responses to Tameka Norris’s assignment to Become Someone Else and how both internal and external change are a constant and inevitable reality in our lives. Thanks for all the wonderful submissions!

  • S2015E05 Produce an Assembly Line | Bob Snead

    • February 19, 2015

    The Art Assignment furthers their exploration of New Orleans to visit artist Bob Snead. He's the Executive Director of Press Street, an organization that promotes art and literature in the community through events, publications and arts education. Snead embraces the collaborative nature of art-making and gives us the assignment to produce an ASSEMBLY LINE.

  • S2015E06 Use creativity to transform a discarded object. | Brandan Odums

    • March 5, 2015

    The Art Assignment continues its journey through New Orleans with Brandan "BMike" Odums, the mastermind behind "ExhibitBE", a collaborative street art exhibition that transformed an unoccupied apartment building and gave it new life. Now he's asking YOU to do something similar.

  • S2015E07 Ten Ideas That led to a Different Idea

    • March 13, 2015

    This week we try our hand at one of those top 10 lists we keep seeing on the Interwebs these days. Specifically, we're going to talk about ten ideas that led to the idea of this very show!

  • S2015E08 Customize a common object. | Brian McCutcheon

    • March 19, 2015

    Indianapolis-based artist Brian McCutcheon asks you to Customize It!

  • S2015E09 Collaborate With Son Lux | Ryan Lott

    • April 2, 2015

    Ryan Lott, also known as Son Lux, is a musician and composer who works in collaboration.

  • S2015E10 The One That Got Away - Update

    • April 16, 2015

    Oliver Blank gives an update on some of the best responses to his challenge

  • S2015E11 Declare your cause. | Allison Smith

    • May 7, 2015

    Today we visit artist Allison Smith in her Oakland, California studio. Her work focuses on historical reenactment and how the past influences the present -- and now she wants to know what YOU are fighting for.

  • S2015E12 Art As Experience: Book Club #2

    • May 14, 2015

  • S2015E13 Make a Thing | Jonn Herschend & Will Rogan

    • May 21, 2015

    This week's assignment comes from Jonn Herschend and Will Rogan, who cofounded THE THING Quarterly, a publication that distributes everyday objects conceived of by different artists. They ask you to consider the meaning of physical objects in an increasingly digital world and Make a Thing.

  • S2015E14 The Case For Andy Warhol

    • May 28, 2015
    • YouTube

    What's the deal with Warhol, and is he worth your time and consideration?

  • S2015E15 Explore a physical boundary. | Zarouhie Abdalian

    • June 11, 2015

    We come to you this week from San Francisco's Exploratorium, where we met with artist-in-residence Zarouhie Abdalian. For her assignment, she wants you to focus on boundaries and the relationships between the spaces they separate.

  • S2015E16 Become a Sci-Fi Character | Desirée Holman

    • June 25, 2015

    This week we sit down with artist Desirée Holman to talk about her current project, Sophont, which explores ideas of science fiction, aliens, new-age ideology, mysticism, and tech culture. Her assignment asks you to become a science fiction character by creating and wearing some kind of psionics hardware that enhances your character's abilities.

  • S2015E17 The Case For Mark Rothko

    • July 2, 2015
    • YouTube

    Rectangles after rectangles after rectangles.

  • S2015E18 Create an embarrassing object. | Geof Oppenheimer

    • July 9, 2015

    This week's assignment comes to you from Chicago based artist Geof Oppenheimer. Geof's work reflects personal experience and the social and political atmosphere they were created in, and he wants you to make an object that does the same.

  • S2015E19 Do a surface test. | Kim Beck

    • July 30, 2015

    You probably made rubbings in elementary school, but Kim Beck views rubbings as field recordings. She wants you to take a snapshot of a particular place by making a rubbing of the ground you're standing on.

  • S2015E20 VidCon Makes a Rug

    • August 6, 2015

    So many of you came out to make a rug with us at VidCon and we couldn't be more thrilled with how it turned out. Thanks so much to all who participated, and especially those who were kind enough to share their thoughts about the experience!

  • S2015E21 Connect with your neighbor through film. | Jon Rubin

    • August 13, 2015

    This week we meet with Jon Rubin, a Pittsburgh based artist whose practice often focuses on cultural exchange, pushing us to imagine other people and their lives more complexly. For his assignment, he asks you to do the same by bridging the gap between you and your neighbor.

  • S2015E22 I Could Do That

    • August 20, 2015

    So you look at a work of art and think to yourself, I could have done that. And maybe you really could have, but the issue here is more complex than that -- why didn't you? Why did the artist? And why does it have an audience?

  • S2015E23 Create someone's Lost Childhood Object. | Lenka Clayton

    • August 27, 2015

    This week we visit Lenka Clayton, another Pittsburgh based artist whose work finds meaning in ordinary, everyday objects. For her assignment, she asks you to partner with someone and recreate a lost childhood object, using their memory of the object and the materials you have around you.

  • S2015E24 Can You Become Someone Else?

    • September 3, 2015

    We’re talking about your responses to Tameka Norris’s assignment to Become Someone Else and how both internal and external change are a constant and inevitable reality in our lives.

  • S2015E25 Host a Scramble Scrabble Dinner. | J. Morgan Puett

    • September 10, 2015

    This week we’re at Mildred’s Lane, a 96-acre site in rural Pennsylvania founded by J. Morgan Puett. Mildred’s Lane is an experiment in living - it's a space where Morgan and her friends collaborate on projects, practice creative domestication, and pay closer attention to every aspect of daily life.

  • S2015E26 What is Mildred's Lane?

    • September 17, 2015

    We continue our stay at Mildred's Lane and talk to it's Director and Ambassador of Entanglement J. Morgan Puett about it's origins, it's goals and how her installation art practice influences her vision for the site.

  • S2015E27 Create paper weavings. | Michelle Grabner

    • September 25, 2015

    multiple mediums, but much of her work centers around pattern and color. Her assignment asks you to recall an activity you may have done in kindergarten and explore it’s potential as a design project.

  • S2015E28 Make a fake flyer. | Nathaniel Russell

    • October 8, 2015

    Today we meet with artist and musician Nathaniel Russell. Nat's work plays with the divide between real and imagined, making posters and flyers for events that may or may not exist. His assignment asks you to make a fake flyer and share it with the world too.

  • S2015E29 What is ArtPrize?

    • October 15, 2015

    We spent a week in Grand Rapids absorbing everything that was ArtPrize 2015, the world’s largest art competition. Here’s a taste of what we found.

  • S2015E30 Make It, then Break It. | Carolina Borja and Amy Toscani

    • October 22, 2015

    We went to ArtPrize and met up with Minneapolis based artists Carolina Borja and Amy Toscani. Their exhibit this year invited the audience to destroy the large-scale handmade piñatas that they had spent hours constructing. And now it’s your turn to make and break.

  • S2015E31 Fix an object you feel bad for. | Diana Shpungin

    • November 5, 2015

    We continue our exploration of ArtPrize and meet with Brooklyn-based artist Diana Shpungin. Diana's work and her assignment for you are both based on empathy -- it's a feeling we usually have for other people, but Diana wants you to direct your empathy towards objects instead.

  • S2015E32 Fierce Women of Art

    • November 12, 2015

    This week we're talking about a group of supremely awesome and unapologetic artists who take risks, question art world practices, and also happen to be women. These are truly inspirational artists who make a wide range of work, and today we're going to single out and celebrate five of them.

  • S2015E33 Use the Present Perimeter to create art. | Jonathan Nesci

    • November 19, 2015

    This week we meet with artist and designer Jonathan Nesci at the First Christian Church in Columbus, Indiana. Jonathan uses systems of design to experiment with new materials and processes, and his assignment for you invites you to do the same by combining a set of particular shapes into different variations.

  • S2015E34 Be a news photographer.

    • December 3, 2015

    Alec Soth is a photographer who works on large-scale projects that play with the boundaries between his roles as a fine art photographer and photojournalist. This week, he asks you to take on the role of a newspaper photographer and report on a story from a different perspective.

  • S2015E35 Art Trip: Twin Cities

    • December 10, 2015

    In which we explore a few of Minnesota's many fantastic art offerings. Let's take a trip through the Twin Cities!

  • S2015E36 Construct a landscape. | Paula McCartney

    • December 17, 2015

    This week’s assignment comes from artist Paula McCartney, whose work explores the boundaries between the natural and unnatural. Her assignment asks you to reexamine what those terms even mean by constructing an image of the so-called natural world.

Season 2016

  • S2016E01 The Case For Kanye

    • January 7, 2016

    Kanye West was given an honorary doctorate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in May of 2015, and more than a couple of people questioned it. But why? Why shouldn't Kanye be taken seriously in the world of art? Here's our case for Kanye as an artist.

  • S2016E02 Caption this painting. | David Rathman

    • January 14, 2016

    David Rathman’s paintings pair atmospheric landscapes with carefully selected phrases, playing with the relationship between text and image. This week, he created a painting for you to caption.

  • S2016E03 Art Trip: Washington D.C.

    • January 22, 2016

    In which we explore Washington, DC's vast and diverse collection of landmarks, museums, and galleries - ranging from institutions like the Hirshhorn to the art-worthy metro system. Let's take a trip through Washington, DC.

  • S2016E04 Copy a Copy a Copy | Molly Springfield

    • January 28, 2016

    This week we meet D.C. based artist Molly Springfield. Molly's graphite drawings transform texts into images, and her assignment for you asks you to consider how repeating a process can turn a copy into an original.

  • S2016E05 Public Art Study: Fred Wilson's E Pluribus Unum

    • February 4, 2016

    What is public art? Who funds it, owns it, and shapes it? Who does it serve? And why is it important? We try to answer some of these questions by looking at an example of public art that never came to be - Fred Wilson’s E Pluribus Unum.

  • S2016E06 The Case for Yoko Ono

    • February 18, 2016

    Yoko Ono was an established artist before most of the world heard of her in 1968, and she continues to make groundbreaking work to this day. Who is Yoko Ono? What is her work? And why should you take her seriously? This is the case for Yoko Ono.

  • S2016E07 Explore a place you see every day. | Assaf Evron

    • March 3, 2016

    This week we visit Assaf Evron in Chicago to consider how photography can help us see the familiar places we visit everyday differently.

  • S2016E08 Art Trip: Chicago

    • March 10, 2016

    In which we explore our neighboring city of Chicago, film with two local artists, and see more art in one day than is probably advisable.

  • S2016E09 The Case for Minimalism

    • March 24, 2016

    You've probably seen a few cubes sitting in an art gallery and questioned why they were there. How could cubes be important? How did we get here? This is the case for Minimalism.

  • S2016E10 Body in Place - Maria Gaspar

    • March 31, 2016

    This week we meet with Maria Gaspar, an artist deeply invested in her community on the west side of Chicago. For her assignment, she asks YOU to engage with invisible spaces in YOUR community.

  • S2016E11 Why Murals?

    • April 14, 2016

    Today we're going to continue our discussion of public art, this time focusing on murals. We've invited Richard McCoy back to the studio to share with us what exactly murals are, where they came from, and how they can contribute to the betterment of the community.

  • S2016E12 Art Trip: Richmond, Virginia

    • April 21, 2016

    In which we explore the great city of Richmond, Virginia, and think about its history as well as its present.

  • S2016E13 Measure your history with material. | Sonya Clark

    • April 28, 2016

    Today we talk to textile artist Sonya Clark, who applies the techniques of textile work to represent her personal and cultural history. Her assignment draws on her insightful approach to histories and asks you to represent yours.

  • S2016E14 Fierce Women of Art 2

    • May 12, 2016

    Our first video on fierce women artists didn't even begin to cover the volume of interesting and boundary-pushing work made by women, so we had to make another. This week we talk about the incredible Artemisia Gentileschi, Mona Hatoum, Frida Kahlo, Hannah Höch, and Yayoi Kusama.

  • S2016E15 Art Assignment Marathon

    • May 19, 2016

    This week we gathered some friends and challenged ourselves to an art assignment marathon - how many assignments can we complete in a day?

  • S2016E16 Conjure a studio. | Hope Ginsburg

    • May 26, 2016

    This week we meet with Hope Ginsburg, an artist who often works outside of a traditional studio. Her assignment asks you to conjure your own studio and imagine your ideal space for learning, thinking, and making.

  • S2016E17 The Art History of the Selfie

    • June 2, 2016

    Artists have been taking selfies since the dawn of photography. Cameras allowed people to capture their own image in a way that had never been possible in all of human history, and today most of us carry these magical devices in our pockets, taking self portraits everywhere we go.

  • S2016E18 Art Trip: Los Angeles

    • June 9, 2016

    In which we explore sunny Los Angeles and take in its enormous range of art offerings, from the eclectic campus at LACMA to an incredible exhibit at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel. It's all worth the drive.

  • S2016E19 Create a vehicular palette. | Jesse Sugarmann

    • June 16, 2016

    Today we’re talking with Jesse Sugarmann about the way car consumerism, and the aesthetic choices behind it, has been a part of your life and your families.

  • S2016E20 Art Happens at VidCon

    • July 7, 2016

  • S2016E21 Art Trip: Tijuana

    • July 14, 2016

    On this international art trip, we travel to Tijuana to meet with Ghana Think Tank and Torolab, explore the city, and visit artist Hugo Crosthwaite's studio.

  • S2016E22 What's Your Problem? | Ghana Think Tank

    • July 21, 2016

    This week we we head to Tijuana, Mexico to talk with John Ewing, Carmen Montoya, and Christopher Robbins of Ghana Think Tank, who are working on a project to encourage communication at the U.S-Mexico border.

  • S2016E23 The Case for Abstraction

    • July 28, 2016

    For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today.

  • S2016E24 Embarrassing Object Empathy

    • August 4, 2016

    This week we share some of your excellent responses to two assignments -- Geof Oppenheimer's Embarrassing Object and Diana Shpungin's Object Empathy.

  • S2016E25 Exquisite Corpse | Hugo Crosthwaite

    • August 11, 2016

    This week we come to you from Rosarito, Mexico AND Chicago, IL to bring you an assignment from Hugo Crosthwaite. Hugo asks you to create a collaborative drawing by playing the Surrealist game Exquisite Corpse.

  • S2016E26 Vanessa Hill of BrainCraft

    • August 25, 2016

    We interview the remarkable Vanessa Hill, creator of BrainCraft, a production of PBS Digital Studios, which explores psychology, neuroscience & why we act the way we do. And we challenge Vanessa to respond to our recent art assignment Conjure a Studio offered by Hope Ginsburg:

  • S2016E27 The Case for Performance Art

    • September 8, 2016

    Dubious of performance art? Break into a cold sweat when you realize it’s about to begin? There’s a reason. Here we present you with a brief history of performance art and attempt to sway you to its potential charms. Let us know if you buy it.

  • S2016E28 Try combinatory play with books. | Pablo Helguera

    • September 15, 2016

    This week we meet Pablo Helguera, an artist, museum educator, and writer, at the Indianapolis stop of his Spanish language bookstore Librería Donceles. His assignment challenges you to give old books new lives through combinatory play. Here's what he means:

  • S2016E29 The Case for Ai Weiwei

    • October 6, 2016

    Ai Weiwei has been called an iconoclast, a radical, a voice for the voiceless, and was once named the most powerful artist in the world. Who is Ai Weiwei? And why is he considered one of the most renowned artists of our time?

  • S2016E30 Draw a shape that represents you. | Tschabalala Self

    • October 13, 2016

    If you were a shape, what shape would you be? This week we meet with Tschabalala Self, whose work explores ideas surrounding the black female body, and her assignment asks you to consider your own body as a symbol too. Here are your instructions:

  • S2016E31 Five Favorite Works of Art with Mike Rugnetta

    • October 20, 2016

    This week Mike Rugnetta joins us to share five of his favorite works of art. Thanks, Mike!

  • S2016E32 Public Art Trip: New York City

    • October 27, 2016

    New York City offers way too many art-viewing opportunities for us to cover in a single art trip video, so this time we decided to focus on the abundant public art around the city.

  • S2016E33 Complain creatively. | The Guerrilla Girls

    • November 4, 2016

    The Guerrilla Girls are asking, nay demanding, that we complain! But we must do so in ways unique and memorable. We met up with them in London at Tate Modern's new Tate Exchange space, where the Guerrilla Girls were in residence and operating a Complaints Department. Your instructions:

  • S2016E34 The Guerrilla Girls Get Shut Out At Frieze Art Fair

    • November 11, 2016

    We follow the Guerrilla Girls as they visit Frieze Art Fair in London to share their new campaign with collectors and gallerists. This is what went down.

  • S2016E35 Art Trip: London

    • November 17, 2016

    For our second international art trip, we travel to London during Frieze Art Fair. We saw a lot of art! Almost too much. (Definitely too much.)

  • S2016E36 Try these proposals! | Peter Liversidge

    • December 2, 2016

    We drop in on London-based artist Peter Liversidge, who gives us proposals in the place of assignments. Do one or do all three and show us your good work!

  • S2016E37 Cases for Political Art

    • December 15, 2016

    This week we explore some of the most powerful artworks ever made, making the case for political art one work at a time. Pablo Picasso's Guernica, Kathe Kollwitz's prints, Kazimir Malevich's Black Square, Iri and Toshi Maruki's Hiroshima Panels, and Martha Rosler's House Beautiful: Bringing the War Home photomontages. What do you think of as political art?

  • S2016E38 Landscape Archaeology | Mariam Ghani + Erin Ellen Kelly

    • December 22, 2016

    This week we speak to collaborating artists Mariam Ghani and Erin Ellen Kelly at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, and learn about their approach to learning about and working with landscapes.

Season 2017

  • S2017E01 Bring a sound to life. | Jamal Cyrus

    • January 19, 2017

    The Guerrilla Girls are asking, nay demanding, that we complain! But we must do so in ways unique and memorable. We met up with them in London at Tate Modern's new Tate Exchange space, where the We meet up with artist Jamal Cyrus in his hometown of Houston, Texas, where we broach the topic of "postmodernism" and are challenged to summon an impossible sound.

  • S2017E02 Art Trip: Houston

    • January 26, 2017

    We take an art pilgrimage to Houston, Texas, and visit the likes of the Rothko Chapel, Jam

  • S2017E03 Create an imaginary friend. | JooYoung Choi

    • February 2, 2017

    We introduce you to the talented and amazing JooYoung Choi, who shares tales of her fictional realm The Cosmic Womb and beckons us to create our own IMAGINARY FRIEND.

  • S2017E04 Art Trip: Indianapolis

    • February 9, 2017

    We figured it was time to come back home and try being tourists in our own town.

  • S2017E05 Explore variations of white. | Odili Donald Odita

    • February 16, 2017

    What is white? What is any color? Philadelphia-based abstract painter Odili Donald Odita talks with us about his work and offers us an assignment about color.

  • S2017E06 The Case for Surrealism

    • March 16, 2017

    "Surrealism" has become shorthand for the bizarre, the irrational, the hallucinatory. But what IS it? Or what WAS it? Today we delve into the history of Surrealism, as it formed in post-World War I Europe and as it has infiltrated our wider culture up to today. Here's our case for what Surrealism is, and why you should care about it.

  • S2017E07 Better Know the Mona Lisa

    • April 6, 2017

    She's probably the most famous artwork of all time, but what do you know about her? It's time to better know the Mona Lisa.

  • S2017E08 Art Cooking: Futurist Meat Sculpture

    • April 20, 2017

    Exploring the intersection of art and food, we prepare two dishes from the 1930s devised by the pasta-hating Italian Futurists. BEHOLD: 1) MEAT SCULPTURE and 2) LIKE A CLOUD.

  • S2017E09 The Case for Copying

    • May 4, 2017

    Sampling, appropriating, borrowing, stealing. Whatever you want to call it, artists have been copying since time immemorial. We look into the history of the practice, and share our theories of why it is done, and what it can offer us.

  • S2017E10 Better Know the Great Wave

    • May 19, 2017

    It's an omnipresent image that has inspired music, tattoos, and even an emoji on your phone. But Hokusai's Great Wave is a woodblock print that was made to be reproduced. What's its story? Let's better know the Great Wave.

  • S2017E11 Art Cooking: Georgia O'Keeffe

    • June 11, 2017

  • S2017E12 The Case for Land Art

    • June 15, 2017

  • S2017E13 Five Favorite Works of Art with April Richardson

    • June 29, 2017

    Comedian and writer April Richardson shares with us five of her favorite works: 1) Billy Bragg's 1988 album “Workers Playtime” 2) Any zine made by Molly Kalkstein 3) Robert C. Wiles' 1947 photograph The Most Beautiful Suicide 4) One particular scene from the 1988 John Waters' movie Hairspray 5) Siouxsie Sioux's face!

  • S2017E14 Art Trip: Marfa

    • July 13, 2017

    The epicenter of the art world is in Marfa, Texas? We visit this small town where Minimalist artist Donald Judd settled in the 70s, and sowed the seeds for its glorious present, worthy of a pilgrimage.

  • S2017E15 Art or Prank?

    • July 27, 2017

    A pair of glasses on an art gallery floor. Art? Or prank? What about a urinal? We compare recent pranks in art museums to art that uses some of the same strategies.

  • S2017E16 Art Cooking: Frida Kahlo

    • August 10, 2017

    We explore the recipes of artist Frida Kahlo, whose work celebrated Mexico's history, vivid colors, and it's FOOD. On the menu: 1) Chiles Stuffed with Cheese aka Chiles Rellenos 2) White Rice with Plantains 3) Nopales Salad 4) Tequila.

  • S2017E17 Five Favorite Works of Art with Jon Cozart

    • August 24, 2017

    Jon Cozart talks to us about classical music, internet videos, Lord of the Rings, and of course, musicals. Here are Jon's five favorite works of art: 1) Spring Awakening 2) Mozart's Requiem in D Minor, K. 626 . 3) The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King . 4) The "Tomorrow" soliloquy from Shakespeare's Macbeth . 5) History of Japan by Bill Wurtz

  • S2017E18 Art Trip: Venice Biennale

    • September 8, 2017

    Behold the 2017 Venice Biennale. Called the "olympics of the art world," the exhibition invades historic (and tourist clogged) Venice, Italy, every two years, and has since 1895. Contemporary art abounds, with installations and exhibitions occupying the city's Giardini and Arsenale, as well as art venues throughout the city. And yes, we ate plenty of gelato and rode in a gondola.

  • S2017E19 Five Favorite Works of Art with Hannah Hart

    • September 21, 2017

    We met Hannah Hart in her studio to talk about everything from painting to poetry -- here are Hannah's five favorite works of art: 1) Little By Little by Hannah Gelb (available here as a print! 2) The video Why Trust Is Worth It by Ze Frank. 3) Biwa Lake Tree, Study 2 by Michael Kenna. 4) Little Red Riding Hood by Cory Godbey. 5) Any poem by Mary Oliver

  • S2017E20 Art Trip: Columbus, Indiana

    • October 5, 2017

    Visit the architectural mecca of Columbus, Indiana, to bask in the mid-century glory of Eliel and Eero Saarinen’s masterpieces and a series of new and innovative installations by renowned designers. We explore the first exhibition of Exhibit Columbus, an annual exploration of architecture, art, design, and community, and ask questions about the value of good design.

  • S2017E21 Art Cooking: Bone Meal

    • October 20, 2017

    Gordon Matta-Clark (1943 - 1978) was one of the most influential artists of his generation, and was also the brainchild behind the infamous BONE MEAL in 1971 at the artist-run Food restaurant in New York City's SoHo neighborhood. He served numerous bone-intensive dishes to the guests and then returned their leftover bones to the as necklaces.

  • S2017E22 Art is Pretentious*

    • November 2, 2017

    *and other things I learned about art from the internet.

  • S2017E23 Do Machines Make Art?

    • November 16, 2017

    When art is generated by Artificial Intelligence, what or who can we call the artist? We look to art history to consider the long collaboration between humans and technology.

  • S2017E24 Art Trip: PST: LA/LA

    • November 30, 2017

  • S2017E25 The Case for Jackson Pollock

    • December 14, 2017

  • S2017E26 Art Cooking: Salvador Dali

    • December 28, 2017

Season 2018

Season 2019

Season 2020

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